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Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning

Film Info
Showtime
Showtime
Premiere Type
Premiere Type
No Premiere
Category
Film Category
Feature
Runtime
Run Time
1h 32min
Directed by
Directed by
Danny Steinmann
Produced by
Produced By
Timothy Silver
Written by
Written by
Martin Kitrosser (story by), David Cohen (story by)
Main Cast
Main Cast
Melanie Kinnaman, John Shepherd, Anthony Barrile
Synopsis
Still haunted by his past, Tommy Jarvis - who, as a child, killed Jason Voorhees - wonders if the serial killer is connected to a series of brutal murders occurring in and around the secluded halfway house where he now lives.

About the Director(s)

Director(s)
Contact Info
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0826164/bio/?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm

Danny

Steinmann

Director
Writer/director/producer Danny Steinmann was the son of noted East Coast art collector Herbert R. Steinmann. Danny made his debut as both writer and director with the funky hardcore porno picture High Rise (1973), on which he used the alias Danny Stone....Read more
Writer/director/producer Danny Steinmann was the son of noted East Coast art collector Herbert R. Steinmann. Danny made his debut as both writer and director with the funky hardcore porno picture High Rise (1973), on which he used the alias Danny Stone. Steinmann was a production associate on Arthur Hiller's The Man in the Glass Booth (1975) and served as an associate producer on the offbeat Gene Roddenberry made-for-TV supernatural fright feature Spectre (1977). In addition, Danny headed a production company in Puerto Rico that made TV commercials for such companies as International House of Pancakes, Chase Manhattan Bank and Wesson Oil. Danny directed and co-wrote the perverse psycho horror winner The Unseen (1980). Dissatisfied with the finished version of the film, Steinmann attributed his directorial credit to the pseudonym Peter Foleg. He followed this film with the terrifically trashy teen exploitation action/revenge thriller doozy Savage Streets (1984). Steinmann hit the relative big time with the mean-spirited slice-'n'-dice sequel Friday the 13th: A New Beginning (1985). Although the movie was a financial success, the production was very troubled and proved to be his cinematic swan song. He was announced as the director for a proposed sequel to the notorious The Last House on the Left (1972) but, alas, this project never came to be. Read less
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